- Pro
Tesla’s new supercomputer will use entirely in-house hardware without Nvidia GPUs
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.
Image Credit: TechRadar
(Image credit: Modified from Wccftech)
Share
Share by:
- Copy link
- X
- Threads
- Tesla restarts Dojo 3 after earlier supercomputer projects failed to meet expectations
- AI5 chip performance will reportedly rival Nvidia Hopper while consuming less power
- Future chips, AI6 and AI7, are planned for incremental technical evolution
Tesla has restarted development of its Dojo 3 supercomputer project after shelving or abandoning earlier versions.
Elon Musk confirmed the move on X, linking the restart directly to progress on Tesla’s in-house AI5 chip.
Previous Dojo efforts failed to meet expectations, with Dojo 1 losing relevance quickly against Nvidia systems and Dojo 2 being cancelled before completion.
You may like-
Nvidia quietly launches free software update for its AI mini PC which turns it into an external AI accelerator for Apple's MacBook Pro
-
The battle of the SuperPods: Nvidia challenges Huawei with Vera Rubin powered DGX cluster that can deliver 28.8 Exaflops with only 576 GPUs
-
"The entire stack is being changed" - Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang looks ahead to the next generation of AI
Now that the AI5 chip design is in good shape, Tesla will restart work on Dojo3. If you’re interested in working on what will be the highest volume chips in the world, send a note to [email protected] with 3 bullet points on the toughest technical problems you’ve solved.January 18, 2026
Tesla reboots Dojo 3 with ambitious in-house AI chips
Dojo 3 is framed as a recovery attempt rather than a clean breakthrough, as Tesla claims the technical foundation is now strong enough to justify reallocating engineers and capital back to the project.
Dojo 3 is expected to be Tesla’s first supercomputer built entirely on internal hardware, without relying on Nvidia components.
Earlier Dojo designs mixed Tesla silicon with external GPU products, limiting differentiation and control, whereas the new approach aligns chip design, system architecture, and software under one roof.
Tesla has openly recruited engineers to scale chip production, signalling ambitions for high-volume manufacturing.
Are you a pro? Subscribe to our newsletterContact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.Central to Dojo 3 is Tesla’s plan to release custom AI chips every nine months, although this will probably test the company’s resolve.
In terms of application, the AI4 and AI5 chips are linked to self-driving development and humanoid robotics, and AI6 is tied to Optimus and large-scale data center deployments.
Future iterations, including AI7, are already mapped out, although expectations point to incremental evolution rather than radical redesigns.
You may like-
Nvidia quietly launches free software update for its AI mini PC which turns it into an external AI accelerator for Apple's MacBook Pro
-
The battle of the SuperPods: Nvidia challenges Huawei with Vera Rubin powered DGX cluster that can deliver 28.8 Exaflops with only 576 GPUs
-
"The entire stack is being changed" - Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang looks ahead to the next generation of AI
Beyond vehicles and robots, the supercomputer could support Tesla’s broader AI tools ecosystem, including training models that compete with established cloud providers.
These claims place Dojo 3 in direct competition with mature AI infrastructure vendors.
According to social commentator Nic Cruz Patane, “Tesla’s chip game is no joke,” noting that AI5’s performance is roughly comparable to Nvidia’s Hopper on a single chip, approaches Blackwell levels when paired, and runs at approximately 250W compared to H100’s 700W or Blackwell’s 1,000W+ at full specification.
Tesla claims its chip designs deliver similar output at lower wattage, but maintaining the planned release cycle will test its discipline and execution consistency.
Its technical promises are ambitious and financially driven, especially given the rising cost of external AI hardware.
Dojo 3 may reduce Tesla’s dependence on third-party silicon, but success will require consistency that earlier projects lacked.
Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!
And of course you can also follow TechRadar on TikTok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp too.
TOPICS tesla
Efosa UdinmwenFreelance JournalistEfosa has been writing about technology for over 7 years, initially driven by curiosity but now fueled by a strong passion for the field. He holds both a Master's and a PhD in sciences, which provided him with a solid foundation in analytical thinking.
Show More CommentsYou must confirm your public display name before commenting
Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.
Logout Read more
Nvidia quietly launches free software update for its AI mini PC which turns it into an external AI accelerator for Apple's MacBook Pro
The battle of the SuperPods: Nvidia challenges Huawei with Vera Rubin powered DGX cluster that can deliver 28.8 Exaflops with only 576 GPUs
"The entire stack is being changed" - Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang looks ahead to the next generation of AI
Meta and Google could be about to sign a mega AI chip deal - and it could change everything in the tech space
AWS wants to be a part of Nvidia's "AI Factories" - and it could change everything about how your business treats AI
Nvidia is reportedly reshuffling its cloud efforts to better combat growing competition
Latest in Pro
Huge data leak of 149 million credentials exposed without any protection – 98GB of unique usernames and passwords from financial services, social media accounts and dating apps
Epson EcoTank ET-4950 ink tank printer review
Crowdstrike and Nord Security partnership nests Falcon Go and Falcon Enterprise directly through NordLayer – combined enterprise-grade protection with VPN and ZTNA for SMBs
Cracking the AI code: realizing AI's true value in finance
Microsoft SharePoint exploited to hack multiple energy firms
Curl will stop bug bounties program due to avalanche of AI slop
Latest in News
The Insta360 CEO just leaked two upcoming cameras in one teaser image
The Galaxy S26 Series looks like getting one of the best Pixel features
ICYMI: the week's 7 biggest tech stories from ChatGPT to OLED TVs
Disneyland Handcrafted is a fascinating look at how Disneyland was built
We just watched the official The Muppet Show on Disney+ trailer and now we're going gonzo
Lego on why Smart Bricks needed custom wireless charging
LATEST ARTICLES- 1'Tesla's chip game is no joke': Elon Musk confirms it has restarted work on its biggest supercomputer yet - but what will it actually be used for?
- 2The Insta360 CEO just leaked two upcoming cameras in one teaser image – here's what might be coming
- 3The PowerA Advantage Wireless Controller is an okay Switch 2 pick on sale — but it’s no Pro Controller
- 4'Weaponized AI' could be the biggest security threat facing your business this year - here's what experts say you should be on the lookout for
- 5I tried the ‘world’s smallest’ noise-cancelling earbuds — and the size isn’t even the most mind-blowing thing about them